Biocompatible Liquid Embolic for the Treatment of Microvascular Hemorrhage.
Hyeongseop KeumJinjoo KimZefu ZhangErin GrafHassan AlbadawiRahmi OkluPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Persistent or recurrent bleeding from microvessels inaccessible for direct endovascular intervention is a major problem in medicine today. Here, an innovative catheter-directed liquid embolic (P-LE) is bioengineered for rapid microvessel embolization to treat small vessel hemorrhage. Tested in rodent, porcine, and canine animal models under normal and coagulopathic conditions, P-LE outperformed clinically used embolic materials in both survival and non-survival experiments, effectively occluding vessels as small as 40 microns with no signs of recanalization. P-LE occlusion is independent of the coagulation cascade, and its resistance to displacement is ≈ 8 times greater than systolic blood pressure. P-LE is also found to be biocompatible and x-ray visible and does not require polymerization or a chemical reaction to embolize. To simulate the clinical scenario, acute microvascular hemorrhage is created in the pig kidney, liver, or stomach; these are successfully treated with P-LE achieving immediate hemostasis. Furthermore, P-LE is found to be bactericidal to highly resistant patient-derived bacteria, suggesting that P-LE may also protect against infectious complications that may occur following embolization procedures. P-LE is safe, easy to use, and effective in treating -microvessel hemorrhage.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- randomized controlled trial
- heart failure
- type diabetes
- magnetic resonance imaging
- left ventricular
- atrial fibrillation
- intensive care unit
- hypertensive patients
- mass spectrometry
- skeletal muscle
- respiratory failure
- ultrasound guided
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- weight loss
- quantum dots
- contrast enhanced